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CHAPTER 5

CHAPTER 5. Externalities. Externalities. Externality – An activity on one entity that affects the welfare of another entity in a way that is outside the market mechanism Not an Externality – suburban-urban migration example. The Nature of Externalities.

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CHAPTER 5

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  1. CHAPTER 5 Externalities

  2. Externalities • Externality – An activity on one entity that affects the welfare of another entity in a way that is outside the market mechanism • Not an Externality – suburban-urban migration example

  3. The Nature of Externalities • Privately-owned versus commonly-owned resources • Externalities can be produced by consumers as well as firms • Externalities are reciprocal in nature • Externalities can be positive • Public goods can be viewed as a special kind of externality

  4. The Nature of Externalities-Graphical Analysis MSC = MPC + MD $ MPC h d g c MD f b MB a e 0 Q* Q1 Q per year Socially efficient output Actual output

  5. What Pollutants Do Harm? • Empirical Evidence: What is the Effect of Pollution on Health? • What Activities Produce Pollutants? • What is the Value of the Damage Done? • Empirical Evidence: The Effect of Air Pollution on Housing Values

  6. Bargaining and the Coase Theorem MSC = MPC + MD $ MPC h d g c MD MB 0 Q* Q1 Q per year

  7. The Coase Theorem • Coase Theorem – Provided that transaction casts are negligible, an efficient solution to an externality problem is achieved as long as someone is assigned property rights, independent of who is assigned those rights • Assumptions necessary for Coase Theorem to work • The costs to the parties of bargaining are low • The owners of resources can identify the source of damages to their property and legally prevent damages

  8. Other Private Solutions • Mergers • Social conventions

  9. Public Responses to Externalities - Taxes MSC = MPC + MD $ (MPC + cd) Pigouviantax revenues MPC d i j c MD MB 0 Q* Q1 Q per year

  10. Public Responses to Externalities - Subsidies MSC = MPC + MD $ (MPC + cd) MPC Pigouviansubsidy d k i f g j h c MD MB e 0 Q* Q1 Q per year

  11. Emissions Fee $ MC f* MSB 0 e* Pollution reduction

  12. 50 50 75 75 90 90 Uniform Pollution Reductions MCH Bart’s TaxPayment Homer’s TaxPayment MCB f = $50 f = $50 25 Bart’spollutionreduction Homer’spollutionreduction

  13. 50 50 75 75 90 90 Cap-and-Trade MCH b MCB f = $50 f = $50 a 10 25 Bart’spollutionreduction Homer’spollutionreduction

  14. Cap-and-Trade v Emissions Fee MC’ $ MC* f* MSB 0 ef e’ e* Pollution reduction Too little pollution reduction Too much pollution reduction

  15. Cap-and-Trade v Emissions Fee MC’ $ MC* f* MSB 0 ef e’ e* Pollution reduction Too little pollution reduction Too much pollution reduction

  16. Emissions Fee v Cap-and-Trade • Responsiveness to Inflation • Responsiveness to Cost Changes • Responsiveness to Uncertainty

  17. Distributional Effects • Emissions fee • Cap-and-Trade

  18. Command-and-Control Regulation • Incentive-based regulations • Command-and-control regulations • technology standard • performance standard • Is command-and-control ever better? • hot spots

  19. The U.S. Response • Clean Air Act • 1970 amendments • Command-and-control in the 70s • How well did it work?

  20. Progress with Incentive-based Approaches • Policy Perspective: Cap-and-Trade for Sulfur Dioxide • Policy Perspective: Cap-and-Trade to Protect Fisheries and Wildlife • individual transferable quotas

  21. Implications for Income Distribution • Who Benefits? • Who Bears the Cost?

  22. Positive Externalities $ MC MSB = MPB + MEB MPB MEB R1 R* Researchper year

  23. A Cautionary Note • Requests for subsidies • Resource extracted from taxpayers • Market does not always fail • Policy Perspective: Owner-Occupied Housing

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